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add slice to man page
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@ -347,7 +347,7 @@ toward the beginning starting at `-1` as the last line. This is also the way
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[Python's slicing](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/509211/understanding-slicing)
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feature works.
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Here is a quick breakdown:
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Here is a breakdown of line slice options:
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| Slice Notation | Input Lines Processed |
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|----------------|--------------------------------------------------------------|
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96
man/jc.1
96
man/jc.1
@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
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.TH jc 1 2023-01-22 1.23.0 "JSON Convert"
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.TH jc 1 2023-01-27 1.23.0 "JSON Convert"
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.SH NAME
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\fBjc\fP \- JSON Convert JSONifies the output of many CLI tools, file-types, and strings
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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@ -6,19 +6,19 @@
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Standard syntax:
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.RS
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COMMAND | \fBjc\fP [OPTIONS] PARSER
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COMMAND | \fBjc\fP [SLICE] [OPTIONS] PARSER
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cat FILE | \fBjc\fP [OPTIONS] PARSER
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cat FILE | \fBjc\fP [SLICE] [OPTIONS] PARSER
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echo STRING | \fBjc\fP [OPTIONS] PARSER
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echo STRING | \fBjc\fP [SLICE] [OPTIONS] PARSER
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.RE
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Magic syntax:
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.RS
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\fBjc\fP [OPTIONS] COMMAND
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\fBjc\fP [SLICE] [OPTIONS] COMMAND
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\fBjc\fP [OPTIONS] /proc/<path-to-procfile>
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\fBjc\fP [SLICE] [OPTIONS] /proc/<path-to-procfile>
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.RE
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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@ -920,6 +920,11 @@ TOML file parser
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\fB--url\fP
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URL string parser
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.TP
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.B
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\fB--ver\fP
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Version string parser
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.TP
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.B
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\fB--vmstat\fP
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@ -1034,6 +1039,85 @@ Generate Bash shell completion script
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\fB-Z\fP, \fB--zsh-comp\fP
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Generate Zsh shell completion script
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.RE
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.PP
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.B
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Slice:
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.RS
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Line slicing is supported using the \fBSTART:STOP\fP syntax similar to Python
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slicing. This allows you to skip lines at the beginning and/or end of the
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\fBSTDIN\fP input you would like \fBjc\fP to convert.
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\fBSTART\fP and \fBSTOP\fP can be positive or negative integers or blank and allow
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you to specify how many lines to skip and how many lines to process.
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Positive and blank slices are the most memory efficient. Any negative
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integers in the slice will use more memory.
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For example, to skip the first and last line of the following text, you
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could express the slice in a couple ways:
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.RS
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.nf
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$ cat table.txt
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### We want to skip this header ###
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col1 col2
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foo 1
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bar 2
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### We want to skip this footer ###
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$ cat table.txt | jc 1:-1 --asciitable
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[{"col1":"foo","col2":"1"},{"col1":"bar","col2":"2"}]
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$ cat table.txt | jc 1:4 --asciitable
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[{"col1":"foo","col2":"1"},{"col1":"bar","col2":"2"}]
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.fi
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.RE
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In this example \fB1:-1\fP and \fB1:4\fP line slices provide the same output.
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When using positive integers the index location of \fBSTOP\fP is non-inclusive.
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Positive slices count from the first line of the input toward the end
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starting at \fB0\fP as the first line. Negative slices count from the last line
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toward the beginning starting at \fB-1\fP as the last line. This is also the way
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Python's slicing feature works.
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Here is a breakdown of line slice options:
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.TP
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.B
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\fBSTART:STOP\fP
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lines \fBSTART\fP through \fBSTOP - 1\fP
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.TP
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.B
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\fBSTART:\fP
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lines \fBSTART\fP through the rest of the output
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.TP
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.B
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\fB:STOP\fP
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lines from the beginning through \fBSTOP - 1\fP
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.TP
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.B
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\fB-START:STOP\fP
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\fBSTART\fP lines from the end through \fBSTOP - 1\fP
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.TP
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.B
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\fBSTART:-STOP\fP
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lines \fBSTART\fP through \fBSTOP\fP lines from the end
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.TP
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.B
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\fB-START:-STOP\fP
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\fBSTART\fP lines from the end through \fBSTOP\fP lines from the end
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.TP
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.B
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\fB-START:\fP
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\fBSTART\fP lines from the end through the rest of the output
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.TP
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.B
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\fB:-STOP\fP
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lines from the beginning through \fBSTOP\fP lines from the end
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.TP
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.B
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\fB:\fP
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all lines
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.SH EXIT CODES
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Any fatal errors within \fBjc\fP will generate an exit code of \fB100\fP, otherwise the exit code will be \fB0\fP.
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@ -6,19 +6,19 @@
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Standard syntax:
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.RS
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COMMAND | \fBjc\fP [OPTIONS] PARSER
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COMMAND | \fBjc\fP [SLICE] [OPTIONS] PARSER
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cat FILE | \fBjc\fP [OPTIONS] PARSER
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cat FILE | \fBjc\fP [SLICE] [OPTIONS] PARSER
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echo STRING | \fBjc\fP [OPTIONS] PARSER
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echo STRING | \fBjc\fP [SLICE] [OPTIONS] PARSER
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.RE
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Magic syntax:
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.RS
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\fBjc\fP [OPTIONS] COMMAND
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\fBjc\fP [SLICE] [OPTIONS] COMMAND
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\fBjc\fP [OPTIONS] /proc/<path-to-procfile>
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\fBjc\fP [SLICE] [OPTIONS] /proc/<path-to-procfile>
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.RE
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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@ -99,6 +99,85 @@ Generate Bash shell completion script
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\fB-Z\fP, \fB--zsh-comp\fP
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Generate Zsh shell completion script
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.RE
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.PP
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.B
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Slice:
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.RS
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Line slicing is supported using the \fBSTART:STOP\fP syntax similar to Python
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slicing. This allows you to skip lines at the beginning and/or end of the
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\fBSTDIN\fP input you would like \fBjc\fP to convert.
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\fBSTART\fP and \fBSTOP\fP can be positive or negative integers or blank and allow
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you to specify how many lines to skip and how many lines to process.
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Positive and blank slices are the most memory efficient. Any negative
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integers in the slice will use more memory.
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For example, to skip the first and last line of the following text, you
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could express the slice in a couple ways:
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.RS
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.nf
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$ cat table.txt
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### We want to skip this header ###
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col1 col2
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foo 1
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bar 2
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### We want to skip this footer ###
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$ cat table.txt | jc 1:-1 --asciitable
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[{"col1":"foo","col2":"1"},{"col1":"bar","col2":"2"}]
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$ cat table.txt | jc 1:4 --asciitable
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[{"col1":"foo","col2":"1"},{"col1":"bar","col2":"2"}]
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.fi
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.RE
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In this example \fB1:-1\fP and \fB1:4\fP line slices provide the same output.
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When using positive integers the index location of \fBSTOP\fP is non-inclusive.
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Positive slices count from the first line of the input toward the end
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starting at \fB0\fP as the first line. Negative slices count from the last line
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toward the beginning starting at \fB-1\fP as the last line. This is also the way
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Python's slicing feature works.
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Here is a breakdown of line slice options:
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.TP
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.B
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\fBSTART:STOP\fP
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lines \fBSTART\fP through \fBSTOP - 1\fP
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.TP
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.B
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\fBSTART:\fP
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lines \fBSTART\fP through the rest of the output
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.TP
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.B
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\fB:STOP\fP
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lines from the beginning through \fBSTOP - 1\fP
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.TP
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.B
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\fB-START:STOP\fP
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\fBSTART\fP lines from the end through \fBSTOP - 1\fP
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.TP
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.B
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\fBSTART:-STOP\fP
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lines \fBSTART\fP through \fBSTOP\fP lines from the end
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.TP
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.B
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\fB-START:-STOP\fP
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\fBSTART\fP lines from the end through \fBSTOP\fP lines from the end
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.TP
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.B
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\fB-START:\fP
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\fBSTART\fP lines from the end through the rest of the output
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.TP
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.B
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\fB:-STOP\fP
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lines from the beginning through \fBSTOP\fP lines from the end
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.TP
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.B
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\fB:\fP
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all lines
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.SH EXIT CODES
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Any fatal errors within \fBjc\fP will generate an exit code of \fB100\fP, otherwise the exit code will be \fB0\fP.
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|
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|
@ -209,7 +209,7 @@ toward the beginning starting at `-1` as the last line. This is also the way
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[Python's slicing](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/509211/understanding-slicing)
|
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feature works.
|
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|
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Here is a quick breakdown:
|
||||
Here is a breakdown of line slice options:
|
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|
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| Slice Notation | Input Lines Processed |
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|----------------|--------------------------------------------------------------|
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Reference in New Issue
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